50 guests,specially invited by City Index,including former High Commissioner to India
Sir Nicholas Fenn,accompanied by Lady Fenn, along with the Marchioness of Bute,
Valentine and Lulu Guinness, Hugo Bulmer and Lucia Silver, Viscountess de Vesci and
her aunt, the Maharani Kumari Karuna Devi of Burdwan,
and City Index COO Simon Price sipped decorative but lethal mango lassis,
laced with vodka, before proceeding to the glassy private dining room for dinner.

The aim of the evening was to bring Jaisalmer's plight to the attention of a
new circle of India-lovers, and to celebrate the two awards,
UNESCO and British Airways, won this year by JiJ.

It was also an opportunity
for Simon Chambers, Director Secretariat of UK UNESCO to present the citation
on behalf of the 2002 UNESCO South East Asian Cultural Heritage Conservation Awards.

Introduced by Sailesh Barchha, Business Development Manager of City Index,
Sue Carpenter spoke about the dangers facing the desert city, and the great
strides that have been made to arrest the damage through JiJ's Streetscape
Revitalisation Project, implemented in Jaisalmer by INTACH,
the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage, and funded by the UK based
Staples Trust.

'Indian glam' was the dress code for the event,
to which guests responded
enthusiastically.

The fashion hit of the evening was Sue Carpenter's
Schiaparelli-pink embroidered organza kurta, designed by fellow guest,
Rajni Malla, whose Nepalese design company was inundated with requests
for similar showstoppers from, among others, two of the most stylish men
in the room - Bollywood music producer Biddu and conservation architect Karan Grover.

The evening was further enhanced by the presence of HH The Maharani Kumari Karuna Devi
of Burdwan, in London visiting her niece and fellow guest The Viscountess de Vesci, and
Valentine and Lulu Guinness, who attended before jetting off to Los Angeles for
the opening of Lulu's new shop.

'Stage designer Will Bowen,
resplendent in Indian Nehru jacket, chatted to Hester Marriott of the Staples Trust,
funders of JiJ's Streetscape Project, while jewellery designer Eileen Coyne and her
daughter Jacina, also a designer, looked a vision in their flowing robes and
Nepalese baubles
- plus the odd member of Westminster's political
fraternity, who had wandered off course into the wrong party.

We are most grateful to Simon Price, Sailesh Barchha and City Index for their supprt
and hard work in making this evening memorable. We would also like to thank the staff
of the Cinnamon Club and Karan Bilimoria
for his continued support of JiJís events with his generous donation of Cobra
beer and General Billyís wine.